Monday, November 3, 2008

Another Sketchcrawl in London

It was Sketchcrawl day again. It was a great turnout with about 7 of us in total. We walked along the South Bank of the Thames from Borough Market to Festival Hall. To see everyone's efforts, check out the forum:
http://www.sketchcrawl.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=42&t=3334




Friday, September 12, 2008

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

I'm back

Here are some more colour studies from around London. Each is in gouache on heavy weight paper, about 1.25 inches in height. There is no need, I've found, to create a large painting in order to explore colour and composition. When scanned at 300dpi a lot of interesting accidental details seem to pop out.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Things I might have seen in London, part 10

In colour with a "u", here are some gouache studies which I have been working on over the past couple of weeks. It's a challenge to work in the rain and snow sometimes. Look closely and you can see some rain spots. I learned a very important lesson in the course of working on these: zinc white sucks. I bought a cheap Windsor and Newton gouache set which came with zinc white. This pigment has the unfortunate property of absorbing colour from pigments that are applied on top of it. The solution: use permanent white instead. Permanent white uses titanium dioxide as a pigment base. It's superb, very opaque, and layers quite well.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Sketchcrawl #18

The eighteenth International Sketchcrawl (www.sketchcrawl.com) was last Saturday. I'm happy to report that attendance was up by 50%! Yes, this time there were three of us.

Thanks to Chris and Alfonso who showed up. It was a full day of sketching, and as usual I felt that I walked too much and drew too little. The fact is that every location has something to offer, if you are open to it. Here are the results, starting with a little gouache study which I created while waiting to begin:



Rainy day tourists at the Tower of London:


Trafalgar Square and "Nando's" restaurant:


Tate Modern and Southwark Cathedral: